In Lincolnville Center, on the outskirts of the village on the Searsmont Road, stands a large old building, the Meeting House, home of the Lincolnville United Christian Church (UCC). Built in 1821 by Joshua Lamb, it is on the National Registry of.
Baked beans. Is there anything more New England? Or anything more Maine? Beans are a “New World” crop, introduced to the wider world along with potatoes, tomatoes, corn, and peppers following the European “discovery” of America hundreds of years ago.
Diane O’Brien prepared a piece for this week: The tradition of the gold-headed Boston Post Cane and its presentation to the oldest resident of a New England town was conceived by a publisher of the Boston Postdaily with an eye toward increasing.
Diane O’Brien, This Week in Lincolnville writer emeritus, once again offered to produce a piece for this week’s column. She writes: A house often holds complicated stories within its walls. Then the occupant(s) die or move away, the house changes.
Should you find yourself at Lincolnville Beach, you may notice a small cannon facing the bay. Defending the town from what? Those rascally Islesboro natives? The yachts out of Camden? What dangers could Penobscot Bay present to this little town?.